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Logitech Lift Vertical Ergonomic Wireless Mouse $77.65 Delivered @ Amazon AU

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Features:
Lift yourself up: When the desk life gets you down, lift yourself up with Logitech Lift Vertical Ergonomic Mouse - a great fit for small to medium right hands
Raise your hand into comfort: Rest on Lift upright mouse throughout the day, with a softly textured grip and snug thumb rest for level-above cosiness
57 degrees of sooooothe: Lift’s vertical shape helps wrists feel like “ahhh” at work, and promotes a more natural posture in the forearm, for day-long comfort and productivity
Relax into focus: Settle into work with a cordless mouse featuring easy-to-reach customisable buttons, whisper-quiet clicks and a SmartWheel for smooth, seamless scrolling
Ergo-certified: Lift wireless vertical mouse has been designed, developed, tested and approved according to criteria set out by leading ergonomists
Connect your way: Connect via Bluetooth Low Energy or Logi Bolt USB to Windows, macOS, iPadOS, Chrome OS, or Linux, and enjoy up to 2 years battery life
Plastic parts in Lift include certified post-consumer recycled plastic (Graphite: 70%, Rose and Off-white: 54% - excludes plastic in receiver, battery, printed wiring assembly (PWA), FFC cable, and packaging)

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closed Comments

  • +1

    People who have used this, has it changed your life ?

    • +3

      I found them better then a mouse. But trackballs are next level if you've got washerwomen wrist/ carpal tunnel syndrome.

    • +5

      I got it and returned it. It's a good mouse but for small hands only. I use M/L gloves (depending on brand/type) and this mouse is for S only, not M.

      From the brief time I used it, it did not change my life. I know there's a bigger one, but it's old af. Give us a new model

      • +1

        Thanks. I would have bought but I barely fit into L gloves so that would have sucked

      • +1

        For a different perspective.

        I have both the Lift and MX Vertical and I have medium sized hands and wear medium sized gloves. I find the Lift vastly more comfortable and controllable than the MX Vertical which in my opinion is bit too high, not as well balanced and often gets knocked over if I am not paying attention.

        I do not agree with your assessment that this mouse is for small hands only. It is "A great fit for small to medium hands" as listed on the website.

        • Sure, different hands and all that. Thanks for your perspective.

    • Got this to alleviate wrist pain but it is not vertical enough. It prolongs wrist pain but does not stop it. It started double clicking after a year

      • damn, what you using now?

        • +1

          M720 but ordered mx 3s. Got deltahub carpio 2.0 and the pain transferred from the wrist to the edge of the palm. Just have to take a break once in a while

          Btw, Would not recommend carpio.

    • Yes, very much so. I was always intrigued by ergonomic setups, and now in my early 30's I started to feel the slight twinge in the wrists when I was using my older mechanical setup at home. The most difficult part for me that I was finding was the switchover from home mechanical to work membrane with normal mouse on both (gaming mice for macro usage in Excel).

      Fiance bought me the Lift for Christmas last year, and I decided to give it a go at work considering the higher usage. Holy crap was it an instant game changer, and that isn't an exaggeration. Yes, it takes a short bit of time to get used to the design style and overall feel, but I seriously can not go back to standard style mice. If I attempt to use a normal mouse, I instantly feel that twinge in the wrist muscles which is evident of incorrect posture.

      Decided as well to go full blown ergonomic, with a J Burrows (OW generic) ergonomic keyboard at work to help and that as well has lifted my productivity and general posture health. Again, much like the mouse your ergonomic keyboards take a bit to get used to but afterwards it is incredibly hard to use a standard style keyboard. I also converted to full ergonomic at home for gaming, with the MX Master being it has a far higher DPI and more macro capabilities. Keyboard at home is the Perixx 535 full-size mechanical, and by gosh it feels bloody good.

      So, long story short ergonomic is actually a legitimate thing and not just some marketing machine.

      • i ended up with mx vertical, i was originally concerned about how easy it was to transition over to this new format but it was honestly no issue at all.
        also got a k860 but obviously i must not have learnt touch typing layout right in school as i keep trying to hit t/b/y/g/h keys with the wrong fingers.

  • +3

    yes i have this, went from normal mx to 2 trackballs (m570 then mx ergo advanced), tried some cheap anker, then settle with this.
    all logitech, all the top range not cheapos
    normal mouse = wrist pain
    trackball = pain around thumb and palm area
    vertical = no pain

    but yes i have small-ish hand/palm
    now using lift and mx keyboard, switching between work and personal laptop

    • My scenario is very similar to this one, and I came to the same conclusion. I am happy with it. Side-scrolling can be a pain to adapt though.

    • similar conclusion. I have the MX anywhere (traditional), MX Ergo (trackball), this Lift (vertical). For me, the Lift is just a little small while MX Vertical is old and I don't want to buy it. My pinky slides on the mouse pad, slightly annoying. My thumb also doesn't like the side buttons so I've stopped using them.

      I switch out the trackball and vertical mouse. But the biggest thing was just to minimise mouse usage and learn keyboard shortcuts as much as possible.

      • Correct. The experts work faster with keyboard. noobs will think the other ways

  • +2

    it kind of sucks. its annoyingly just a little bit too small, and not nearly vertical enough. cbf getting another mouse so just putting up with it.

  • wish there was a way of getting my grubby hands on this without buying it first. I have weird hands

    • +1

      If you are unsure if you can use vertical mice comfortably, there are cheap Kensington at Officeworks and cheap Anko at Kmart to try first. I used both until I could afford the Logitech MX version.

    • Some jb hifi will have this on display

  • i reckon if ur hands are really small it will be a comfortable fit. I went with the larger one (vertical mx) and never had an issue or feel uncomfortable using it.

  • +7

    Had this mouse now for about a year. No hardware issues at all. Same battery.
    I find this mouse has eliminated carpal tunnel syndrome, of which gaming was the main cause. It has also helped reduce my tennis elbow (work injury).
    I find it's just vertical enough to stop the constant ulnar and radial deviation from flogging out your tendons in your wrist and also up in your elbow. I've got M-L male hands and I use this mouse in a claw method and it works for me.
    One issue you may have is that, because the mouse button action aligns with the plane of travel of the mouse, sometimes clicks can result in unwanted pointer movement. Files have been accidentally re-directoried in Windows this way, lol. Also, because the mouse is much taller than a regular mouse, sometimes it gets yeeted across the desk pad as I quickly and subconsciously switch to keyboard.
    I switch to my G700s for gaming. I have been playing Diablo with the Lift lately though, without any issues.

    If you do have pain in your wrist from constant mouse use, I would recommend trying this for the price.

  • +9

    I have had this for about 2 months now.

    One annoying thing is that when you click, you are applying a force within the plane of movement. Meaning, if you click, your cursor will probably move until you are disciplined enough to action the click to include some thumb pressure to offset the the movement.

    To further explain, on a traditional mouse, you click applying force perpendicular to the plane of cursor movement. Ie, you slide the mouse around left right forward back, but you click the mouse downwards. This Logitech mouse you slide the mouse around left right forward back, but you click left so it affects your cursor.

    • +1

      This is an incredibly niche issue that most people wouldn't realise - nor be able to accurately describe. Well done.

      I was considering upgrading to a Logitech Lift Left (if it ever comes on special to match!!) but your comments have made me slightly reconsider… I have such a light mouse pressure in a claw grip that this kind of unintended movement force would be rather common & annoying for myself.

  • These are not ambidextrous

  • Thanks, pull the trigger

  • Bought this last year for work, it's abit small to have your whole hand on it for a perfect fit but still, using this has completely prevents wrist pain for me.

  • wrong mouse reviewed

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